First of 52 weekly old kiddie records

mark frauenfelder

My latest book, Made by Hand, now in paperback. Follow me on Twitter.

 Archive Week 01 Here's the first of 52 records that will me made available this year by Basic Hip: "Walt Disney's Story of Robin Hood." It comes as a single zip file with 192kbps and the album cover art (17.2 MB). Yippee! Link

UPDATE: Here's a link to the torrent. (Thanks, Brian!)

Sf writers' birthday calendar

Cory Doctorow

Upcoming appearances

* Feb 9, 2012, DeKalb, IL: Day of Doctorow, NIU
* Feb 10-12, 2012, Chicago, IL: Capricon 32
* Feb 13, 2012, Arlington, TX: UT Arlington College of Engineering Distinguished Speaker Series
* Feb 16, 2012, Victoria, BC: 13th Annual Privacy and Security Conference

Recent books:
* Context (essays)
* With a Little Help (short stories)
* For the Win (YA novel)
* Makers (adult novel)

Capt Xerox sez, "What do James Tiptree Jr. and Orson Scott Card have in common? It's certainly not their writing styles, but they do share the same birthday. After the success of last year's free science fiction calendar, the Website at the End of the Universe is offering a new one for 2005. Each page has a list of famous science fiction authors' and artists' birthdays for that month. This year's artwork features covers from the ever-popular line of Ace Doubles. Each month highlights a cover of a book's author who was born in that month." Link (Thanks, Capt Xerox!)

Dan Gillmor launches new life

xeni jardin

Boing Boing partner, Boing Boing Video host and executive producer. Xeni.net, Twitter, Google+. Email: xeni@xeni.net.

Pioneering journalist and fearless tech explorer Dan Gillmor has a new home on the web -- and new plans. He writes:
For the first time in two decades I'm not on the payroll of a large media corporation. As of today I'm on the payroll of a one-person company, comprised of me, but media is still on my agenda.

As many of you know I'm going to work hard on a project to inspire, enable and create what many have been calling a new kind of journalism. In the new world that I and many others believe is coming, the grassroots will have a fundamental and crucial role in the process -- a change that I tried to outline in my book, We the Media, which appeared in the second half of 2004.

For me, this departure is challenging and exciting. I've left what surely is one of the best jobs in mainstream journalism, and will miss my former colleagues immensely (not to mention the pay, benefits and freedom to say what I believed).

I'm also jazzed. Yes, this is a chance to truly walk my talk. But the opportunity to be in on what I consider a pivotal shift, and to be involved just as it begins to happen, made my decision easy.

Read the rest here: Link.

Curry cures Alzheimer's?

mark frauenfelder

My latest book, Made by Hand, now in paperback. Follow me on Twitter.

The pigment that makes curry yellow, curcumin, does a better job at treating Alzheimer's than the majority of drugs being tested. (Interestingly, India has one of the lowest Alzheimer rates in the world.)
The new UCLA-Veterans Affairs study involving genetically altered mice suggests that curcumin, the yellow pigment in curry spice, inhibits the accumulation of destructive beta amyloids in the brains of Alzheimer's patients and also breaks up existing plaques.
Link

NYT: SMS as warning system for future disasters

xeni jardin

Boing Boing partner, Boing Boing Video host and executive producer. Xeni.net, Twitter, Google+. Email: xeni@xeni.net.

Another really solid piece from New York Times reporter John Schwartz about technology's role in the tsunami disaster. Here, questions about a text-message emergency warning system, and an interview with "Sanjaya," aka "Morquendi," whose SMSes from Sri Lanka were linked and excerpted here on BoingBoing earlier this week (Link):
When the tsunami hit Sri Lanka, Sanjaya Senanayake found he could not make calls on his cellphone or regular land line at first - but he could send and receive text messages from his cellphone. Mr. Senanayake, a 23-year-old television producer, has spent the last few days reporting on the disaster, frantically searching for friends and posting his experiences to the networked world through a [redacted] (desimediabitch.blogspot.com) - often via text messages relayed by a friend in Mumbai, India, formerly known as Bombay. "It's a very easy, instant way to get the message across," he said in a cellphone interview.

Experts say that thousands of deaths might have been avoided if warning systems had been in place to alert the people around the rim of the Indian Ocean of the tsunami. No such system exists there now, although the United States has such a system in place for countries of the Pacific basin. Those who design and use the wireless technology known as Short Message Service, currently used for chatter and advertisements, say it could be used to jumpstart governments' warning networks.

"This tragedy is going to put this more to the forefront," said Greg Wilfahrt, cofounder of SMS.ac, a company that sells text message services in more than 170 countries. The technology, though used most avidly in the United States by teenagers, is wildly popular worldwide and has accompanied the international boom in cellphone use. Even in parts of the developing world, cellphones are everywhere: almost half of the Malaysian population uses them, according to a survey released this month.

"The way they use the cellphones over there, it makes us look like amateurs," said Steve O'Rourke, a director of the Asia Pacific Research Group, which has studied cellphone use. Cellphone use has not spread quite as widely in many of those nations as it has in the developed world, of course. But getting cellphones to people living in remote, impoverished areas has been a major focus of economic development efforts. Even a few phones might do the trick in the face of an impending disaster, Mr. Senanayake said. The message need only reach "one person in every locality who has a phone," he said, and that person can spread the word.

Link to NYT story.

BoingBoing reader Jacob Rome writes,

I read the post this morning about using SMS to help warn people of disasters. While this is a good idea, no one has talked about a much better technology for warning masses of people-- radio & TV broadcasting. The US has a system set up to do this, as I'm sure we're all aware from the tests of the Emergency Broadcast System. The geologists in US & Japan who recognized the threat of a tsunami could have called international broadcast media such as CNN & the BBC. In turn, by broadcasting news of the possible tsunami in the Indian Ocean, they would alert national authorities, local media & even some residents about the pending disaster. This was a tremendous missed oppurtunity, no formal system was needed to warn people and a little creativity could have send tens of thousands of lives.
One week after the disaster, we're seeing a number of reports and op-eds examining the failures that accompanied this event, and questions about how information could be shared more quickly in the future. It would seem that one lesson learned here is that multiple, overlapping alert systems offer the best reach. How tragic that in this era of abundant and unprecedented global connectivity, such critical information did not reach those who needed it most. We can do better.

Update: BoingBoing reader Gene Cowan says,

Arlington County, Virginia -- home of the Pentagon -- has been using an SMS alert system for a couple of years now. It was very helpful a week ago when a gas tanker overturned on the highway near my house -- just beside the Pentagon. Most of us woke up thinking it was another terrorist attack, but within minutes the SMS system send a message to my phone with the news of the truck crash, then a second message telling us to stay indoors because of possible fuel spills. Very helpful and reassuring.
Link

Preshrunk: a blog for cool t-shirts

Cory Doctorow

Upcoming appearances

* Feb 9, 2012, DeKalb, IL: Day of Doctorow, NIU
* Feb 10-12, 2012, Chicago, IL: Capricon 32
* Feb 13, 2012, Arlington, TX: UT Arlington College of Engineering Distinguished Speaker Series
* Feb 16, 2012, Victoria, BC: 13th Annual Privacy and Security Conference

Recent books:
* Context (essays)
* With a Little Help (short stories)
* For the Win (YA novel)
* Makers (adult novel)

My pal Boogah has created a great new blog for the New Year: Preshrunk, a blog about cool t-shirts that you can buy online. I own about 300% more tees than I can make good use of, but I'm still obsessed with great, funny tees. Boogah's got great taste in shirts, too.
Dear Vintage Gamer Geek,

Atari logo shirts are played out. I'm pretty sure most of you know that, but it bears repeating. They're been played out since the nerd character in Road Trip wore one and danced like a jackass to Run DMC. I hate to break it to you but Nintendo shirts are almost over too. Mark my words: Commodore shirts are going to be "the next big thing".

But why Commodore? Because when all else fails, it's best to go as retro as you possibly can. Since I couldn't find any Timex Sinclair shirts, Commodore had to be it. So pull out your VIC-20, C64 or C128 and let's party.

Link